Can you solve this Thurston County cold case?

There were no signs of a fight, no obvious clues why Nancy Moyer, a 37-year-old mother of two, would vanish from Tenino.

March 6 marks a year since her disappearance. Moyer’s family and police in Thurston County are hoping maybe now they’ll get a break that could provide answers.

Moyer’s case is featured this weekend on “Washington’s Most Wanted,” the Q13 Fox show that has helped capture 108 fugitives. Former Louisiana reserve police officer and current Q13 Fox weather forecaster Parella Lewis spoke with Moyer’s husband and Thurston County Detective David Haller, the lead investigator.

“With all the information that we’ve developed in this case, it’s been a very deep, extensive investigation,” Haller told Lewis. “I feel that there’s a 10 percent possibility that she’s alive somewhere, and 90 percent that she’s not.”

Nancy and her husband, Bill, were separated when she went missing, but shared time with their two daughters. The last Sunday she was seen alive, Moyer’s husband told Lewis she wasn’t there when he went to drop off their children.

“It was just completely unheard of for her not to be there when I dropped the kids off,” he told Q13. “So, very unusual right off the bat.”

When Haller went into Nancy Moyer’s home, the lights in the living room and kitchen were on. Here shoes and purse were there. Her car wasn’t moved.

“The keys to her car were hanging where she always hung them,” he told Lewis. “The house itself didn’t appear to be disturbed, or look like there was an altercation or struggle.”

A Tenino police officer saw Moyer about 6:45 p.m., leaving from an Olympia grocery store where she’d gone after work. No one has seen her since, though a neighbor reported hearing her voice later that night.

Haller has gathered DNA from Nancy’s parents and kids, creating a profile for her, and she’s in a national database that can help identify remains that may be found.

Moyer was 4-foot-11, about 120 pounds with black and brown hair and brown eyes. She had a butterfly tattoo on her lower back, a hibiscus flower image on her left hip and starts, hearts and flowers on her upper right arm. She also has other tattoos.

Her family is offering a $105,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a suspect. Anyone with information, including those who want to give anonymous tips, can call Crime Stoppers of Puget Sound at 1-800-222-TIPS.

Seattlepi.com and “Washington’s Most Wanted” have partnered to profile local cold cases. Summaries of previous cases are below:

Jennifer Brinkman was 19 when she was killed in 1998. Her case is one of two Marysville police cold case homicides. She was found on the floor of her bedroom, killed with an ax. Police have DNA of a male suspect, but it hasn’t been linked to anyone in department databases. Read more here.

Police said blunt force trauma killed John Schuoler nearly four years ago in his Kirkland apartment. Police don’t believe he died right away and think the killer may have used an Army green REI backpack to take money or contraband from the apartment. Read more here.

Porter

On Dec. 11, seattlepi.com and “Washington’s Most Wanted” profiled the case of Chris Porter, a father of four who was shot to death in his Lynnwood home. Police think the incident may have started as a home-invasion robbery. Read more about his case here and here.

Brazzel

On Nov. 16, seattlepi.com and “Washington’s Most Wanted” profiled the case of Tracey Brazzel, a 22-year-old woman last seen at a Mill Creek bar on May 26, 1995. Two days later, Brazzel’s white Ford Probe, which was usually parked at her apartment, was found damaged down the road from the complex in the 4500 block of 164th Street Southwest. Investigators believe Brazzel may have been killed within 10 to 15 miles of that location. Read more about her case here and here.

Rearden

On Oct. 30, seattlepi.com and “Washington’s Most Wanted” profiled the homicide of Cynthia L. Rearden, who was found dead nine years ago in a marsh on Woods Lake Road, northeast of Monroe. She was killed eight months earlier. Read more about her story here.

Pietz

On Oct. 24, seattlepi.com and “Washington’s Most Wanted” profiled the homicide of Nicole Pietz. She was found strangled in 2006 near Des Moines Memorial Drive South and South 144th Street. Click here to read more and watch a video about her case.

“Washington’s Most Wanted” airs at 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday on Q13 Fox, and at 9:30 p.m. on My Q2. For show times in other cities, click here.